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Remote physiologic monitoring (RPM) may be doing more than helping patients track blood pressure and glucose levels between visits. New research from Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health finds that practices adopting RPM saw a 20% boost in Medicare revenue over two years, while also increasing total patient visits and maintaining access for non-RPM patients.
Adoption of RPM also allowed these practices to expand care for more patients — especially higher-risk and underserved populations — without reducing access for non-RPM patients.
Continue reading at medicaleconomics.com
The health care industry operates in a constant tension between delivering high-quality, continuous patient care and managing escalating operational costs. Remote Patient Monitoring (RPM) has emerged …
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